Pope Conon Sicily
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Conon Sicily

Conon (Pope Conon) Sicily
Born [date unknown] [location unknown]
Son of [father unknown] and [mother unknown]
[sibling(s) unknown]
[spouse(s) unknown]
[children unknown]
Died [location unknown]
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Profile last modified | Created 18 May 2021
This page has been accessed 301 times.
Preceded by
John V
83rd Pope of the Roman Catholic Church
23 October 686 - 21 September 687
Succeeded by
Sergius I

Biography

Notables Project
Pope Conon Sicily is Notable.

According to the Liber pontificalis, Conon was a Greek, the son of an officer from the Thracesian Theme.[1]

He became pope on 23 October 686.[2]

He died on 21 September 687 and is buried in St Peter's Basilica, Rome.[1]

Flocknote Popes in a Year [3] tells us:

Pope Conon was the son of a Thracian soldier and had been educated in Sicily. Though not a barbarian, he apparently still was very good looking. His appearance, along with his character and advanced age, caused him to be a solid compromise candidate when rival camps couldn’t decide on a new pope following the death of John V. Conon’s election came as a result of the downside to not having the emperor confirm candidates for pope.
As Eric John’s book on the popes reads, “The greater freedom of election...the greater danger there was of the intervention of laymen.” As pope, Conon welcomed the Irish St. Killian and his companions, making Killian a bishop and sending them out to evangelize in Franconia (southeast Germany).
Pope Conon died after a long illness on September 21, 687, exactly 11 months after taking office.
Pope Conon was very close with the new Byzantine emperor, Justinian II. The emperor informed Conon that he had recovered the canons of the Sixth Ecumenical Council and intended to abide by them. Conon said (to paraphrase), "You're the best, thanks."
In addition, like John V’s relationship with Justinian’s father, Constantine IV, Conon’s friendship with the emperor offered the Church some breathing room on things like taxes paid to the government on Church income.
Conon’s presence in Rome as a priest, despite having been educated over 500 miles away in Sicily, was likely a result of Islamic attacks on the area during the mid-7th Century. Many Sicilian clergy took refuge in the Eternal City during that time to avoid persecution.
In 687, Emperor Justinian II negotiated a peace treaty with the Islamic army and also removed 12,000 Christians from Lebanon in an effort to protect them.

Research Notes

This profile is being updated by the Popes Project.

Sources

  1. 1.0 1.1 Wikipedia Pope Conon
  2. Vatican
  3. Flocknote Popes in a Year
    SOURCES (and further reading)
    John, E. (1964). The Popes: A concise biographical history. New York: Hawthorn Books.
    Pope Conon - http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/04258a.htm
    Pope Conon - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pope_Conon
    687 - https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/687




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Pope Conon



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Categories: Byzantine Papacy | 7th Century | Catholic Popes | Notables